Leif Panduro (born April 18, 1923, Frederiksberg, Denmark—died January 16, 1977, Asserbo) was a Danish novelist and dramatist, a social critic who wrote in a satirical, humorous vein.
His first novel, Av, min guldtand (1957; “Off, My Gold Tooth”), was an ironic and at times hilarious description of small-town life, based to a large extent on Panduro’s own experiences. The same was true of his next novel, Rend mig i traditionerne (1958; “Kick Me in the Traditions”), a study of a schoolboy and his puberty crisis. De uanstaendige (1960; “The Indecent Ones”) is a critical account of the Danish middle class during the German occupation. Panduro’s most ambitious novel is Øgledage (1961; “Saurian Days”), which makes use of a sophisticated, modernistic narrative technique. The saurians of the title refer to those who protest against the deadening conventions of everyday life. The conflict between instinctive energies and the demands of conformity becomes the central theme in several of Panduro’s novels from the 1960s—Fern fra Danmark (1963; “Far from Denmark”), Fejltagelsen (1964; “The Mistake”), and Den gale mand (1965; “The Crazy Man”). Panduro could see no easy resolution of this antagonism, and the breakdowns of his main characters confirm the repressive nature of even a seemingly idyllic society like Denmark.
Panduro produced a number of scripts for radio, television, and film, becoming one of the most successful Scandinavian dramatists of the 1970s with such works as Farvel, Thomas (1968; “Goodbye, Thomas”) and I Adams verden (1973; “In Adam’s World”).